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Leading Change. Case study. Why Firms Fail at Change. Allowing too much complacency Having no powerful guiding coalition Underestimating the power of a vision Undercommunicating the vision Permitting obstacles to block the vision Failing to create short-term wins
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Leading Change Case study
Why Firms Fail at Change • Allowing too much complacency • Having no powerful guiding coalition • Underestimating the power of a vision • Undercommunicating the vision • Permitting obstacles to block the vision • Failing to create short-term wins • Declaring victory too soon • Neglecting to anchor changes in the new culture
Leading Change By John P. Kotter • Create a Sense of Urgency • Create a Guiding Coalition • Develop a Vision and a Strategy • Communicate the Change Vision • Empower Employees for Broad-based Change • Generate Short-term Wins • Consolidate Gains and Produce More Change • Anchor New Approaches in the Culture
Case Study: The Changing Hospital Read the Case
Stage 1: Create a Sense of Urgency
Sources of Complacency The absence of a major and visible crisis Too much happy talk from management Too many visible resources Human nature capacity for denial Low overall performance standards Complacency A “kill the messenger” or low confrontation culture Org. Structures that focus employees on narrow functional goals A lack of sufficient performance feedback from external sources Internal measurement systems that focus on the wrong indexes
Ways to Raise Urgency Level • create a crisis • eliminate obvious examples of excess • set goals so high that they can’t be reached by business as usual • stop measuring sub-unit performance. Measure broader indices of performance • send more information about customer satisfaction and financial performance to more employees
Ways to Raise Urgency Level (cont.) • use consultants to force more relevant and honest discussions into management meetings • put more honest discussions of company problems in newsletters and speeches • bombard people with the upside opportunity of change (i.e., reward, future opportunities, etc..) • insist that people talk regularly to unhappy customers, suppliers and shareholders
Stage 2: Create A Guiding Coalition
Effective guiding coalitions have 4 key characteristics: • Position power • Expertise • Credibility • Leadership
Building a Coalition • Find the Right People • power, expertise, and credibility • leadership and management skills • Create trust • through planned off-site meetings • With lots of dialogue and joint activity • Develop a common goal • sensible to the head • appealing to the heart
Case Study: The Changing Hospital Stage 1 & 2 Analysis
Stage 1: What was done to create a sense of urgency for change? What could have been done? Stage 2 What was done to form a group of people who would drive the change? what could have been done? Case Study: The Changing HospitalStage 1 and 2 Analysis
Stage 3: Develop a Vision and a Strategy
Vision Leadership Creates Strategies Plans Management Creates Budgets
Six Characteristics of an Effective Vision • Imaginable • Desirable • Feasible • Focused • Flexible • Communicable
Creating an Effective Vision • initial first draft by an individual • modified & clarified by guiding coalition • effective teamwork is essential • process can be messy, difficult, and charged with emotion • takes months or even years to formulate • appeals to head and heart • ends with direction that is desirable, feasible, focused, flexible and conveyed in 5 minutes or less
Stage 4: Communicate the Change Vision
Key Elements in Effective Communication of Vision • simplicity • metaphor, analogy, example • multiple forums • repetition • leadership by example • explanation of inconsistencies • two-way communication
Case Study: The Changing Hospital Stage 3 & 4 Analysis
Stage 3: What was done to develop a vision and strategy for change? What could have been done differently? Stage 4 What was done to communicate the vision? What could have been done differently? Case Study: The Changing HospitalStage 3 and 4 Analysis
Barriers to Empowerment Formal structures make it difficult to act Bosses discourage actions aimed at implementing new vision Employees understand vision and want to assist, but are boxed in A lack of needed skills undermines action Personnel and information systems make it difficult to act
Empowering People to Effect Change • Communicate a sensible vision to employees • Make structures compatible with the vision • Provide the training employees need • Align information and personnel systems to the vision • Confront supervisors who undercut the needed change
Stage 6: Generate Short-Term Wins
Characteristics of Effective ST Wins • It’s Visible • people can see for themselves • It’s Unambiguous • there is little argument over the call • It’s clearly related to the Change Effort • they can see the relationship
The Role of ST Wins • provide evidence that sacrifices are worth it • reward change agents with a pat on back • help fine-tune vision and strategies • undermine cynics and self-serving resisters • keep bosses on board • build momentum
Case Study: The Changing Hospital Stage 5 & 6 Analysis
Stage 5: How were people empowered to make the changes? What could have been done differently? Stage 6: What possibilities for short-term successes were set-up? What could have been done differently? Case Study: The Changing HospitalStage 5 and 6 Analysis
Stage 7: Consolidate Gains and Produce More Change
Successful Stage 7 Change • more change, not less. Use credibility • more help is solicited and developed • leadership from senior management • project management and leadership from below • reduction of unnecessary interdependencies
Stage 8: Anchor New Approaches in the Culture
Anchoring Change in the Culture • culture change comes last, not first • new approaches sink in only after it’s clear they work • requires a lot of talk about the validity of the new practices • may involve turnover • make succession decisions that are culture-compatible
Case Study: The Changing Hospital Stage 7 & 8 Analysis
Stage 7: What was done to consolidate the successes and produce more change? What could have been done differently? Stage 8: What was done to formalize and institutionalize the change? What could have been done differently? Case Study: The Changing HospitalStage 7 and 8 Analysis
Leading Change BY John P. Kotter • Create a Sense of Urgency • Create a Guiding Coalition • Develop a Vision and a Strategy • Communicate the Change Vision • Empower Employees for Broad-based Change • Generate Short-term Wins • Consolidate Gains and Produce More Change • Anchor New Approaches in the Culture